I think you have this backwards. Completely backwards.
First, neither the Eclipse IDE, nor the Android plugin for Eclipse,
are really developed by the community. While they may accept
community contributions, the main developers in are paid
professionals.
Second, if the Android paid
I can't say I agree.
I like working in Eclipse and it supports *every* type of project that
I might want to combine to make a product.
The ADT could be a bit more responsive sometimes but I haven't had a
lot of problems with it and I would really not want a whole new IDE to
do my development in.
Using Eclipse on Windows 7 / 64 bit here just fine, and very happy with it
overall.
Automatic rebuilds occasionally lag a little (i7 860, 4G RAM), but then it's
a small price to pay for not having to think about a separate build step.
My favorite feature is refactoring, I like how easy it is to
I wish I could have every eclipse naysayer sit by me and pair
program. I've never had an IDE that I can burn through code so
efficiently in every way. In fact, they do have UX experts working on
it. It's gotten very good, but like any big IDE, you need to know
lots of details to make use of
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